Top News:
John Plunkett / Guardian:
From BBC news trainee via ‘head prefect’ to director general — Lord Hall became editor of the Nine O'Clock News at the age of 34 and was seen by some as being too close to John Birt — Tony Hall returns to a rather different BBC to the one he left for the Royal Opera House in 2001.
RELATED:
Dan Sabbagh / Guardian:
Will the new BBC director general take the heat off Lord Patten? — The BBC Trust chairman has finally got the man he wants, but how will Tony Hall's appointment affect his own future? — Lord Hall, suddenly, is the man everybody wanted all along. The 61-year-old Royal Opera House boss …
Robert Andrews / paidContent:
New BBC boss should stick with Entwistle's bold online plan — When George Entwistle gave his first speech to BBC staff after becoming director general in September, he delighted many in the digital media sector. — For some years now, BBC Online has approached online much as a medium …
Discussion:
Guardian, bbc.co.uk, 24/7 Wall St. and Guardian
Jeanne Whalen / Wall Street Journal:
Tony Hall to Take Helm at Scandal-Shaken BBC
Tony Hall to Take Helm at Scandal-Shaken BBC
Discussion:
BBC, New Statesman, New York Times, Huffington Post UK, Deadline.com, Telegraph, Spectator, Daily Mail, Mirror.co.uk, Financial Times, Guardian and The Next Web
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Future returns to profitability — Metal Hammer and Total Film publisher reports pre-tax profit of £1.1m in the year to 30 September — Future Publishing has returned to profitability, despite reporting a 13% drop in revenues for the year to 30 September, thanks in part …
Discussion:
Journalism.co.uk, Media Week, The Appside and paidContent
Robert Andrews / paidContent:
Does a supermarket magazine really have more readers than The Sun? — Just when “branded content” is gaining heightened prominence, custom magazine publisher Cedar has announced Tesco Magazine, which it publishes for the supermarket giant, has become the UK's most-read print publication.
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Leveson report to be published next Thursday — Lord Justice Leveson confirms date but says he will not field questions from journalists or grant interviews that day — Lord Justice Leveson will publish his report on press standards next Thursday and make a televised statement …
RELATED:
Dominic Ponsford / Press Gazette:
All three party leaders ‘want to see action in this Parliament and as soon as possible’ on the press — All three party leaders met with representatives of the campaign group Hacked Off yesterday and reportedly all said that they “want to see action in this Parliament and as soon as possible” to regulate the press.
Discussion:
Media News
Richard Alleyne / Telegraph:
Date set for Leveson Inquiry publication
Date set for Leveson Inquiry publication
Discussion:
Hollywood Reporter
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
3 journalists quit N.Y.'s Register-Star after colleague is fired — Three journalists at the (Hudson, N.Y.) Register-Star quit the paper after a colleague was fired for resisting his editor's insistence that he include what he viewed as superflous detail in a story.
Emilie Friedlander / Fader:
Arthur Founder Jay Babcock on the Magazine's Return to Print — Jay Babcock, founder of Arthur Magazine (for which I once interned), made a surprise announcement last week that the longrunning music and culture periodical, perhaps best known for its dual embrace of psych-folk and radical lifestyle politics …
Reuters:
Final FT Deutschland to appear on Dec. 7-sources — German business daily Financial Times Deutschland (FTD) will publish its last edition on Dec. 7 when owner Gruner + Jahr (G+J) shuts it down, two sources told Reuters on Thursday. — The FTD, salmon pink like its British namesake …
Matthew Sparkes / Telegraph:
Rupert Murdoch sells $10m of News Corp shares — News Corp chairman and chief executive Rupert Murdoch has sold his non-voting shares in the company for around $10m (£6.3m). — Rupert Murdoch remains the largest voting New Corp stakeholder with 40pc of class B shares
Steven Swinford / Telegraph:
Lord McAlpine settles with ITV for £125,000 — Lord McAlpine, the former Conservative Party treasurer, has reached a £125,000 settlement with ITV after the broadcaster inadvertently made public false allegations linking him to child abuse. — The peer previously said he would sue …
RELATED:
Press Gazette:
Police to probe naming of Lord McAlpine on Twitter
Police to probe naming of Lord McAlpine on Twitter
Discussion:
Bloomberg, BBC and @skynewsbreak